Business Standard

Sebi plans checks for FIIs taking private bank route

- PAVAN BURUGULA

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is planning checks and balances on overseas investors taking the ‘private bank route’ to invest in domestic markets.

The move comes after several industry players expressed concerns that the new route allowed by Sebi could be misused by investors, such as participat­ory notes (p-notes).

Last week, Sebi — through a circular titled Easing of access norms for investment by foreign portfolio investors — allowed clients of private banks to trade in Indian equities without having to register with the market regulator.

While Sebi has only given an inprincipl­e nod to the proposal, regulatory sources said a fine print of the framework would be released by Sebi in the next one month.

“I want to assure that Sebi will put enough safeguards so that the route is not exploited. Only the banks which are ready to forego their client confidenti­ality agreements will be allowed to use the route,” said a Sebi official.

It is also learnt that Sebi will keep the investment structure tight — a stark difference from p-notes. Sources said Sebi would only permit omnibus structures for the route. In such a structure, a private bank will be allowed to have only a single portfolio and all the investment­s will be channelled through the same.

“We will not allow segregated portfolio for the framework as it could be misused. Only fund structures will be permitted and there will be a common portfolio,” the official cited above said. On a positive note, Sebi is planning to keep the route open for all classes of investors, including institutio­ns and individual­s.

Interestin­gly, there seems to be a stark departure in Sebi’s view on indirect participat­ion of foreign investors in Indian markets.

“Indirect participat­ion is not a concern for us as long as we have informatio­n of the end beneficial owner,” a Sebi official said.

Among other developmen­ts, the regulator seems to have taken a final call on issuance of p-notes from internatio­nal financial services centres (IFSCs), such as the GIFT City in Gujarat. It is learnt that Sebi is not inclined to allow p-note issuances from the GIFT City.

The proposal has been under the regulator’s considerat­ion for the past one year as some of the big-ticket foreign institutio­ns were keen on having such a framework. It could be very useful, especially in the current circumstan­ces where foreign funds have been stripped of p-notes and the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX) route to invest in the Indian futures market.

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